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Tulayl

Tulayl
Tulayl is located in Mandatory Palestine
Tulayl
Tulayl
Arabic تليل
Name meaning The small mound.
Subdistrict Safad
Coordinates 33°03′03.32″N 35°37′11.57″E / 33.0509222°N 35.6198806°E / 33.0509222; 35.6198806Coordinates: 33°03′03.32″N 35°37′11.57″E / 33.0509222°N 35.6198806°E / 33.0509222; 35.6198806
Palestine grid 208/272
Population 340 (together with Husayniyya) (1945)
Area 5,324 dunams
5.3 km²
Date of depopulation late April 1948

Tulayl (Arabic: تليل‎‎) was a Palestinian Arab village in the Safad Subdistrict located 14.5 kilometers (9.0 mi) northeast of Safad. It was situated on small, sandy hill on the southwestern shore of Lake Hula, near the merging of two wadis. Together with the nearby village of al-Husayniyya, it had a population of 340 in 1945. Tulayl was depopulated during the 1948 Palestine War.

Scholars identify the mound upon which Tulayl was built with the Roman town of "Thella". Its hilltop location protected it from floods.

Under the Ottoman Empire, in 1596, Tulayl was a part of the nahiya ("subdistrict") of Jira, under the administration of Safad Sanjak, with a population of 215. It paid taxes on wheat, barley, bees, and water buffalo.

In 1881, the Palestine Exploration Fund's Survey of Western Palestine (SWP) described the place as having "modern cattle-sheds and traces of ruins of basaltic stone". Its houses, closely packed together, were constructed from adobe and cane. In the second half of the 19th century, after the Algerian followers of Abdelkader El Djezairi had been defeated by the French in Algeria, they sought refuge in another part of the Ottoman Empire, and were given lands in various locations in Ottoman Syria, including Tulayl, and the nearby villages of Dayshum, Ammuqa, Al-Husayniyya and Marus.


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